This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

With infection rates rising and growing numbers of NHS staff catching the virus, the Royal College of Nursing is calling on the UK government to extend the life assurance scheme.
Ten health and care workers died in the three months to 5 March this year following workplace exposure, according to the Health and Safety Executive. The NHS and Social Care Coronavirus Life Assurance scheme, which entitles families of nursing staff and others who die from Covid-19 to financial support, ended in England on 31 March.
The RCN has written to the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care calling for an urgent extension to the scheme. No extension could mean that the families of health and care staff who contract the virus at work and then die will not be entitled to compensation worth £60,000.
Pat Cullen, RCN chief executive, said: “Hundreds of health and care staff have lost their life to Covid-19 which they contracted as part of their vital work on the frontline during the pandemic. The overriding principle must be that no member of nursing staff who loses their life this year should be afforded any less respect and family support than one who died in 2020 or 2021.
“The pandemic is far from over. Now is not the right time to remove the reassurance that if the worst were to happen to nursing staff delivering frontline care, their loved ones would be compensated. I urge you to delay the end of the scheme until a time when nursing staff and all health and care workers are assured that their lives are not at such risk from the pandemic.”
This story was first published in digitalhealth.net
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